[quote="NOHUHU"]Not at all. It works fine. Needs more testing though, to compare this mode in big wind.

So many mods, so little time,..

Hi;AMAS aft.At least 3 Ti´s are waiting for your news and test to go on...here in Gran Canaria (canary islands).suggest:We got special interest in downwind and surfing waves sailing test, to see if as the lift is going back the nose will be with more tendency to "submarine". Remember to do the test with the two crew on their seats and the two crew at the rear.Many many thanks...

No reason to wait. The T3 modification will allow you to sail with the amas in either the front or the rear position. It will provide you several new ways to configure the seating on your boat.

Moving the Amas to the rear is the easy part. You can also add tramps or Hakas to them in that position. The front passenger can still ride them there, or the skipper, or a third passenger.

Building a third set of Akas (hence the TI3 name) is a bit more complicated. I think the many photos and videos here do a good job of outlining what is required.

I have a private page with more photos and sketches that loosely document the building process. I will send Jose the link. Anyone else who is serious about building a TI3 design can PM me for that info.

Nohuhu,Great video. You're making it look even more tempting. I'm seriously thinking about making one of these for my TI. Your sailing buddy can sure move around quickly back there, hope he doesn't fall off .

ps. I hadn't seen a close up picture of your version of the double bungee that you put on Topher's TI, very clever. Looks like Hobie made it , hummmm?Did you do the same to the front aka and add a second post like I did on mine?

The video highlights the advantages of the TI3 really well. Great stuff! I was surprised how far out the haka need to be to balance the TI's larger sail in strong winds. I was thinking Chrisj's 'quarter deck' might be a simpler alternative for the rear of the TI but it wouldn't extend that far out.

I was surprised how far out the haka need to be to balance the TI's larger sail in strong winds. I was thinking Chrisj's 'quarter deck' might be a simpler alternative for the rear of the TI but it wouldn't extend that far out.

If the hakas need to be that far out, the quarterdeck (or a Batwing) may still be useful by making it easier to get out to them. Also, when the wind dropped a bit you wouldn't be stuck having to sit too far out.

Tramps/Hakas was one of our first test runs, and we tried several seating arrangements after that. We put the bench out there to test the strength of the turnbuckle system and to explore solo sailing techniques. As you can tell, I was just "tramp candy" for this flight. Capt was having so much fun hiking, he wouldn't let me drive.

That said, you can still place the Universal Hakas anywhere you want along the 3rd rail (rear Akas).

The owner and I now prefer the double Haka mode with the rear Haka on the inside, like so:

Since there is an overlap, I can hop on the rear bench ends first and slide to my outside hakas with ease.

When things get cooking, the solo pilot can scoot forward on his bench to better leverage the sail. His normal position at the back rear corner achieves a nice bow lift though.

The benches are far more effective that the tramps for hanging out. It's easier to fine tune your ballast, in-out & side-side.

It takes a goodly wind to require both parties out on the benches.

_________________"THE WIND IS YOUR FRIEND,.."

Last edited by NOHUHU on Sun Oct 27, 2013 8:57 pm, edited 1 time in total.